Urbana Campus Research Calendar (OVCRI)
First 100 matches found
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Speaker: Alireza Seif, Quantum Staff Researcher, IBM
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Speaker: Matthew Yancey (IDA/CCS) Title: Partitioning sparse graphs in bounded degree forests
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Lectures and discussions on current work in research and development in nuclear engineering and related fields by staff, advanced students, and visiting speakers.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Speaker: Abdullah Irfan, Pfaff group
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Join us at noon on Wednesdays this fall for yoga with a view! All sessions are free and will be held in Beckman's fifth-floor tower room. All are welcome to bring their own mat!
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"Introduction to the Core Facilities" - All Core Facilities Staff Members, Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology
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Monthly invite-only Community of Practice meeting.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Associate Professor, Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
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Human-Centered Design is a creative problem solving approach that uses design thinking tools to identify the unmet needs of a population in order to collaboratively and iteratively develop relevant and innovative solutions. This seminar provides an introduction to the tools, spaces and processes that define this approach.
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Samuel Rosner is a third year undergraduate studying physics.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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QCB Director Zan Luthey-Schulten University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Introductory remarks by QCB grad student Andrew Maytin Title: Integration of experiments with theory & simulations
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A QCB seminar presentation featuring QCB Director Zan Luthey-Schulten.
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Dr. Rebecca Niemiec (Colorado State University) is this week's seminar speaker.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Come find the IGB at Grange Grove, the official tailgate party area, before all University of Illinois home football games. Come out to see the game and catch the IGB doing hands-on science at Grange Grove beforehand. We will be tossing bean bags to pollinate a giant sunflower and learning whether different food items are wind or animal pollinated. ILL! INI!
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Dr. Paul Bogdan, Duke University, will lecture on "Big and Small Stimulus Representations in the Ventral Stream."
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Speaker: Jennifer Choy, Dugald C. Jackson Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Wisconsin - Madison
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Speaker: Bruce Reznick (UIUC) Title:Equal sums of two cubes of quadratic forms
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Bo Wang, PhD Department of Bioengineering; Stanford University "Learning the super power of animal diversity one cell type at a time: regeneration, symbiosis, and evolution"
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Join BioRender's Co-Founders for a live Webinar & Q&A!
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Dr. John Wong is a professor and director of medical physics in the Department of Radiation Oncology and Molecular Radiation Sciences at Johns Hopkins University.
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Speaker: Douglas B. West (Zhejiang Normal University and University of Illinois) Title: Strong parity edge-colorings of graphs
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Fall 2024 iSEE Levenick Resident Scholar Tirthankar "TC" Chakraborty, scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Lab's Atmospheric Sciences and Global Change Division, will give a public talk about the variability of environmental hazards and climate risks in cities and the problems that causes in urban modeling, as well as potential solutions.
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Lectures and discussions on current work in research and development in nuclear engineering and related fields by staff, advanced students, and visiting speakers.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Speaker: Jacob Beckey, Leditzky Group
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Join us at noon on Wednesdays this fall for yoga with a view! All sessions are free and will be held in Beckman's fifth-floor tower room. All are welcome to bring their own mat!
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Rafael Jaime Gonzalez Ricon, Graduate Research Assistant - Animal Sciences
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Join the MINFLUX discussion in IGB 607. This week featuring the Paul Selvin lab.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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How can you teach about, through, and with Human-Centered Design in higher education? This workshop introduces instructors to Human-Centered Design and its potential applications in teaching strategies and course materials.
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This talk introduces the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H). ARPA-H is a funding agency that supports high-impact research capable of driving biomedical and health breakthroughs that can deliver transformative, sustainable, and equitable health solutions for everyone.
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This lecture provides a kind of bibliographic back story to Gerald Horne's latest book, “Armed Struggle? Panthers & Communists; Black Nationalists & Liberals in Southern California through the Sixties & Seventies.” This lecture will draw upon decades of scholarship by Horne that led to the publication of his latest book.
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Speaker is Trung Vu
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Speaker is Trung Vu
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Jack is a senior majoring in physics with a minor in mathematics from Woodstock, IL. He is planning to pursue a career in computational plasma physics with a focus on magnetic fusion energy. Jack currently does research at the UIUC Center for Plasma Material Interactions and serves as President of the Illinois Alpha chapter of Tau Beta Pi Enginering Honor Society.
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Join us for training on the Report of Non-University Activities (RNUA) and the University's Policy on Conflicts of Commitment and Interest.
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Join us for training on the Report of Non-University Activities (RNUA) and the University's Policy on Conflicts of Commitment and Interest.
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Dr. Matt Scholz (Arizona State University) is this week's seminar speaker.
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Early Medieval England boasts the earliest collection of vernacular medical texts north of the Alps. Many are translations of classical materials; others are native Old English “folk” medicine, charms, prognostics, and prayers. This lecture explores the hybrid medical discourse produced by the juxtaposition of Mediterranean and insular textual traditions.
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Come find the IGB at Grange Grove, the official tailgate party area, before all University of Illinois home football games. Come out to see the game and catch the IGB doing hands-on science at Grange Grove beforehand. We will be learning about cool bat facts in preparation for our upcoming Bat Fest on September 28th in collaboration with UPD, INHS, and NRES. ILL! INI!
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Academic staff members must annually complete a disclosure & request for approval of such activities. Throughout the year, additional disclosures & requests for prior approval are necessary whenever a change in such activities is proposed or when required by granting agencies. RNUA forms can be completed throughout the year for new hires or if an employee's status changes.
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Dr. Hyejin Lee, UIUC, will lecture on "Precise Individual Measures of Inhibitory Control."
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Speaker: Jihong Cai
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Throughout her process, Jen Everett remixes images of herself in conversation with the materials she collects to talk about Black life, kinship, and collective gathering. Could you dim the lights? is her first solo museum presentation.
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Speaker: Chen-Lung Hung, Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Purdue University
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Noah Whiteman, PhD Departments of Integrative Biology and Molecular and Cell Biology; University of California, Berkeley "Acquisition of chemical defenses via horizontal gene transfer in insects"
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Carbon Nanoparticle Combustion in a Shock Tube: Spectroscopy and Microscopy Techniques for Improved Modeling of Optical Signatures with Colton Willhardt
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Speaker: Abhishek Dhawan (UIUC) Title: Palette Sparsification via the Nibble Method
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Dr. Steven Chu will present his talk titled, "The Challenges in Getting to Net-Zero GHG Emissions" on September 17, 2024 at 3 p.m. in the Beckman Institute Auditorium, 1025.
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Please join us for a MillerComm Lecture by George A. Miller Visiting Scholar, Jordan Pascoe.
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In this talk, professor Jordan Pascoe draws on the resources of feminist philosophy to explore how disasters trigger social change-- in both progressive and authoritarian ways.
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Beckman-Brown Lecture — Steven Chu, "The Challenges of Getting to Net-Zero Greenhouse Gas Emissions"
Join Nobel Laureate Steven Chu, former U.S. Energy Secretary under President Barack Obama, for the annual Beckman-Brown Lecture on Interdisciplinary Science. Chu is a Professor of Physics, Molecular and Cellular Physiology, and Energy Science and Engineering at Stanford University.
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Speaker: Wonwoo Kang
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Lectures and discussions on current work in research and development in nuclear engineering and related fields by staff, advanced students, and visiting speakers.